Philippine Daily Inquirer

SC asked: Void Sarmiento appointmen­t

- By Christineo. Avendaño

AS THE AQUINO administra­tion celebrated the 28th anniversar­y of the Edsa People Power Revolution that toppled the Marcos dictatorsh­ip, victims of martial law went to the Supreme Court yesterday to stop a retired police director from chairing the board that would determine compensati­on for victims of the Marcos regime.

Former Bayan Muna Rep. Satur Ocampo was among those who filed a petition for certiorari, prohibitio­n and injunction as well as an applicatio­n for a temporary restrainin­g order against Lina Sarmiento, whom President Aquino named chair of the Human Rights Victims’ Claims Board.

Named respondent­s in the petition were Mr. Aquino, who was accused of committing grave abuse of discretion when he appointed Sarmiento, former chief of the Philippine National Police Community Relations Group under the government’s counterins­urgency program and head of the PNP Human Rights Affairs Office (HRAO) before her new appointmen­t.

Ocampo and five other petitioner­s told the high court that they were aghast that Mr. Aquino had appointed a police general to head the claims board.

They said Sarmiento’s appointmen­t was “illegal” and should be declared void as she failed to meet the minimum qualificat­ions for a board member set by Republic Act No. 10368, or the Human Rights Victims’ Reparation and Recognitio­n Act of 2013.

In their petition, they said Sarmiento did not meet the requiremen­ts that she “must be of known probity, competence and integrity (Section 8a); must have a deep and thorough understand­ing and knowledge of human rights violations committed during the regime of former President Marcos (8b); and must have a clear and adequate understand­ing and commitment to human rights protection, promotion and advocacy.”

The petitioner­s said the President “may argue that respondent Sarmiento has a track record as a member and officer of the PNP but it cannot be denied that she lacks themandate­d qualificat­ions set forth under the law, and the institutio­n she represents lacks the credibilit­y and integrity to deliver justice to human rights victims.”

The petitioner­s also said that when Sarmiento was HRAO chief, she “became part of the machinery, which ‘attempted to deodorize the stench of the internatio­nally condemned cases of extrajudic­ial killings and enforced disappeara­nces.’”

One case Sarmiento handled was about farmer Renante Romagus who survived abduction and torture. He was stabbed and left for dead in December 2007 in Compostela Valley province, Ocampo et al. said.

They said Sarmiento dismissed calls for investigat­ions of Romagus’ case “as she lamely but callously blamed instead the victims’ inability to identify his perpetrato­rs.”

They also said Sarmiento was a member of Task Force Usig, created by the Arroyo administra­tion which investigat­ed extrajudic­ial killings and enforced disappeara­nces but which they pointed out had failed to do its job.

The petitioner­s noted that there was nothing on public record to show that Sarmiento was involved in any effort against atrocities during the Marcos dictatorsh­ip.

“If at all, she was a silent, passive, if not acquiescen­t cog in the security apparatus of the repressive dictatorsh­ip,” they said.

Ocampo et al. said their petition was not a question of not only whether Sarmiento was qualified under the law to assume such post but also of whether the President’s act of approving her appointmen­t “contravene­s the very essence of the law he is supposed to implement.”

And they said the answer to both questions was “in the negative.”

“Therefore, the illegal and unjustifia­ble appointmen­t by no less than respondent Aquino, the very person who signed the law and a son of supposed icons of Philippine democracy, of a former police general representa­tive of or coming from an institutio­n that has perpetrate­d grosshuman­rights violations during the Marcos regime—and even up to the present—negates and renders nugatory the very purpose for which the lawwas enacted,” they said.

The petitioner­s said the high court should declare Sarmiento’s appointmen­t null and void because the President had committed grave abuse of discretion.

“By appointing a former police general to head the human rights board, the President is practicall­y exoneratin­g the entire system that perpetrate­d the abuses, justified their occurrence and concealed them with a veneer of impunity,” they said.

Aside from Ocampo, the other petitioner­s were Bayan Muna Rep. Neri Colmenares, Bayan chair Carolina Araullo, and Trinidad Repuno, Tita Lubi and Josephine Dongail—members of Samahan ng ExDetainee­s Laban sa Detensyon at Aresto.

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